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May 31, 2010
05/10
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WJLA
tv
eye 246
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i use it once inside to kill the bugs. stops them dead. guaranteed. and outside to keep new ones from moving in. that's up to 12 months protection against bugs. and 12 months of keeping our house to ourselves. until your mother comes. right. ortho home defense max. defend what's yours. the middle of this special moment and i need to run off to the bathroom. i'm fed up with always having to put my bladder's needs ahead of my daughter. so today i'm finally talking to my doctor about overactive bladder. [ female announcer ] if you're suffering, today is the day to talk to your doctor and ask about prescription toviaz. one toviaz pill a day significantly reduces sudden urges and accidents all day and all night. plus, toviaz comes with a simple plan with tips on food and drink choices. if you have certain stomach problems or glaucoma or cannot empty your bladder, you should not take toviaz. toviaz can cause blurred vision and drowsiness, so use caution when driving or doing unsafe tasks. the most common side effects are dry mouth and constipation. [ jackie
i use it once inside to kill the bugs. stops them dead. guaranteed. and outside to keep new ones from moving in. that's up to 12 months protection against bugs. and 12 months of keeping our house to ourselves. until your mother comes. right. ortho home defense max. defend what's yours. the middle of this special moment and i need to run off to the bathroom. i'm fed up with always having to put my bladder's needs ahead of my daughter. so today i'm finally talking to my doctor about overactive...
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100
Sep 8, 2010
09/10
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WMAR
tv
eye 100
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your doctor may use genetic tests to determine treatment. don't stop taking plavix without talking to your doctor as your risk of heart attack or stroke may increase. people with stomach ulcers or conditions that cause bleeding should not use plavix. taking plavix alone or with some other medicines, including aspirin, may increase bleeding risk, so tell your doctor when planning surgery. tell your doctor all medicines you take, including aspirin, especially if you've had a stroke. if fever, unexplained weakness or confusion develops, tell your doctor promptly. these may be signs of ttp, a rare but potentially life-threatening condition, reported sometimes less than 2 weeks after starting plavix. other rare but serious side effects may occur. ♪ [ female announcer ] good friends never run out of things to talk about... and during endless shrimp at red lobster, you can keep the conversation going over endless servings of your favorite shrimp. from classics like garlic shrimp scampi and decadent shrimp pasta... to new creations, like crunchy p
your doctor may use genetic tests to determine treatment. don't stop taking plavix without talking to your doctor as your risk of heart attack or stroke may increase. people with stomach ulcers or conditions that cause bleeding should not use plavix. taking plavix alone or with some other medicines, including aspirin, may increase bleeding risk, so tell your doctor when planning surgery. tell your doctor all medicines you take, including aspirin, especially if you've had a stroke. if fever,...
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Dec 9, 2010
12/10
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WMAR
tv
eye 211
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and then, jan asked us to leave. we'd been there for 40 minutes, and he said it wasn't safe for us anymore. and it wasn't safe for him to be seen with us. good luck to you. we then traveled 400 miles to the south, where we found a man taking the taliban head-on. bismullah khan is the police chief of a district where the taliban was in control. just this spring we filmed them operating checkpoints. but this summer, thousands of u.s. soldiers arrived. so, unlike jan mohammad, bismullah doesn't have to hide, even though he is constantly reminded of the risks. he sleeps in his office, inside a u.s. military base, surrounded by the dead. each of these men in these photos died for him, fighting the taliban. in eight years, 400 of his officers and friends have been killed. then the taliban killed his father. then his brother. and then they killed his 11-year-old son with a suicide bombers. and yet, despite unspeakable sacrifice, 43-year-old bismullah kahn still supports the u.s. "if you have given us our last chance," he sa
and then, jan asked us to leave. we'd been there for 40 minutes, and he said it wasn't safe for us anymore. and it wasn't safe for him to be seen with us. good luck to you. we then traveled 400 miles to the south, where we found a man taking the taliban head-on. bismullah khan is the police chief of a district where the taliban was in control. just this spring we filmed them operating checkpoints. but this summer, thousands of u.s. soldiers arrived. so, unlike jan mohammad, bismullah doesn't...
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Sep 6, 2010
09/10
by
WJLA
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eye 203
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use just once per day for dawn-to-dark hold. it is important to use the product as directed. fixodent and forget it. >>> an >>> and finally tonight here the american heart. this is the story of a nurse and her patient and the extraordinary discovery when she walked into that hospital room. here's jeremy hubbard. >> i love you. >> i love you too. >> reporter: family circumstance tore them apart. now a miraculous coincidence has brought them back together. >> you did good. >> reporter: when victor peraza came here a veteran nurse took note of his name and told the story on "good morning america." >> the doctor mentioned his name and i completely froze. i was stunned and i said, i have to go into this room and look at this patient and said, what are your children's names? and right away he said, oh, i have a daughter named wanda and the second he said that, i just burst out crying and i ran out of the room. >> reporter: it was her father who had walked out of her life in 1969. he and her mother married young. there were problems and they split up when wanda was just a baby. >> i
use just once per day for dawn-to-dark hold. it is important to use the product as directed. fixodent and forget it. >>> an >>> and finally tonight here the american heart. this is the story of a nurse and her patient and the extraordinary discovery when she walked into that hospital room. here's jeremy hubbard. >> i love you. >> i love you too. >> reporter: family circumstance tore them apart. now a miraculous coincidence has brought them back together....
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. >> thanks for joining us. world news is next. i'm cheryl jenning autos hope to see you >>> tonight on "world news," the fight is on. the campaign showdown on taxes and the economy. as the president calls out republicans by name. >>> and they are under water in parts of texas, swamped by a foot of rain from hermine. rescues at the last minute. >>> "world news" investigates. what if translators for u.s. soldiers in afghanistan only pretended to know the language? the wrong world can be fatal. brian ross is here. >>> and getting answers on your health. dr. oz talks about his cancer scare. we ask more questions about preventing cancer for everyone. >>> and here east's a dancing d. new scientific proof how you can be a star when your friends go dancing. >>> good evening. it will be the big battle to the finish line in november, and this is the question -- how big a tax cut will you get next year? and should taxes increase on the wealthiest americans? we have an exclusive interview with the president tonight. he walked into the lion's
. >> thanks for joining us. world news is next. i'm cheryl jenning autos hope to see you >>> tonight on "world news," the fight is on. the campaign showdown on taxes and the economy. as the president calls out republicans by name. >>> and they are under water in parts of texas, swamped by a foot of rain from hermine. rescues at the last minute. >>> "world news" investigates. what if translators for u.s. soldiers in afghanistan only pretended...
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383
Dec 14, 2010
12/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 383
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unitedhealthcare offered us a specially trained rn who helped us weigh and understand all our options. for me cancer was as scary as a fastball is to some of these kids. but my coach had hit that pitch before. turning data into useful answers. we're 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. >>> tonight, we take a look at a hidden phenomenon taking lives in towns across america. one of the deadliest, houston, where over the last four years, there have been over 1200 deaths of accidental overdoses from prescription drugs. so, chris cuomo and his team went undercover tler and found a surprising group being recruited to buy the drugs. the homeless. "world news" investigates. >> reporter: it's early morning in downtown houston, the homeless are lining up. many looking for a disturbing kind of work. >> i got the car to come pick us up. i just need three people. >> reporter: the job -- pill smurfing. meaning groups of homeless going together to pain clinics and posing as patients to get powerful narcotics. >> you had to get up early in th
unitedhealthcare offered us a specially trained rn who helped us weigh and understand all our options. for me cancer was as scary as a fastball is to some of these kids. but my coach had hit that pitch before. turning data into useful answers. we're 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. >>> tonight, we take a look at a hidden phenomenon taking lives in towns across america. one of the deadliest, houston, where over the last four...
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Dec 6, 2010
12/10
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WJLA
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eye 191
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i want to bring in john karl who covers capitol hill for us. a lot of democrats are not very happy tonight. what does this mean for what happens next? >> reporter: well, diane, democrats didn't expect to like this deal but now that they're hearing the details, many of them are outraged about it. especially upset about a provision they didn't expect regarding the estate tax or as republicans like to call it, the death tax. the estate tax is supposed to go up to 54% next year but under this deal it will go down to 35% and only apply to estates valued at over $5 million a year. to a lot of democrats up here, that's just another big tax cult to the wealthy and in their view another reason to oppose that. >> so what faces the president in the weeks ahead? >> reporter: well, some tough discussions with democrats. i'm told vice president biden will be up here to try to sell this plan to democrats tomorrow. a spokesperson told me pointedly house democrats have not agreed to this deal. ultimately, it's expected that he will get the votes he needs here i
i want to bring in john karl who covers capitol hill for us. a lot of democrats are not very happy tonight. what does this mean for what happens next? >> reporter: well, diane, democrats didn't expect to like this deal but now that they're hearing the details, many of them are outraged about it. especially upset about a provision they didn't expect regarding the estate tax or as republicans like to call it, the death tax. the estate tax is supposed to go up to 54% next year but under this...
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Dec 15, 2010
12/10
by
KGO
tv
eye 293
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thanks for joining us. >> have a good night. see you again at 6:00. >>> tonight on "world news," frozen zone. millions from the midwest to the deep south suffer through bone chilling, teeth rattling arctic cold. a danger for drivers, crops and animals. >>> bail battle. britain sets bail for wikileaks founder julian assange, but sweden fights back. our reporter is in the courtroom, and brian ross reveals the battle inside wikileaks. >>> pill mills. we go undercover to buy powerful pain drugs, prescription narcotics dispensed almost like candy to the homeless. "world news" investigates. >>> and opt out. the latest trend in phys-ed class is giving kids a pass. why are states letting them skip gym, even as childhood obesity grows? >>> good evening. winter may be a full week away, but it feels like right now. on the heels of all that heavy snow, more than half the country some 30 states, are coping with the kind of cold that cuts like a knife. take a look. a huge blanket of arctic air blasting out of canada, all the way down to flori
thanks for joining us. >> have a good night. see you again at 6:00. >>> tonight on "world news," frozen zone. millions from the midwest to the deep south suffer through bone chilling, teeth rattling arctic cold. a danger for drivers, crops and animals. >>> bail battle. britain sets bail for wikileaks founder julian assange, but sweden fights back. our reporter is in the courtroom, and brian ross reveals the battle inside wikileaks. >>> pill mills. we...
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. >> from all of us here, thanks for watching. we appreciate your time. we'll see you at 6:0 >>> tonight on "world news" -- done deal -- breaking news about those tax cuts. they will stay in place for every american. late word of a compromise. >>> cutting cancer -- just in tonight, it turns out one aspirin a day can reduce your risk. >>> and we also have news tonight about elizabeth edwards. word that she has taken a serious turn for the worst. >>> closing in -- wikileaks founder julian assange ready to turn himself in on rape accusations as more leaks hit his website. >>> and "dandy" don -- remembering don meredith, the glamorous quarterback who made us laugh as he put "monday night football" on the map. >>> good evening. we start tonight with taxes and breaking news. those politically charged tax cuts. they have been on the book since george w. bush was president. and there is late word tonight the fight over keeping those tax cuts has ended. president obama has agreed that everyone, including the wealthiest americans, will keep their tax breaks. so, wh
. >> from all of us here, thanks for watching. we appreciate your time. we'll see you at 6:0 >>> tonight on "world news" -- done deal -- breaking news about those tax cuts. they will stay in place for every american. late word of a compromise. >>> cutting cancer -- just in tonight, it turns out one aspirin a day can reduce your risk. >>> and we also have news tonight about elizabeth edwards. word that she has taken a serious turn for the worst....
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Sep 17, 2010
09/10
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WJLA
tv
eye 179
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they call us wacky. they call us wing nuts. we call us we the people. >> reporter: trying to turn questions about her finances and her credibility into an astault by an out of touch ruling class on ordinary americans of faith. >> will they attack us? yes. will they smear our backgrounds and distort our records? undoubtedly. >> reporter: it is to a degree working. o'donnell claims to have raised $1.6 million through her website since her victory tuesday night and taken opportunities like last night's candidates forum in delaware to explain comments from her previous life as a conservative activist. such as this clip from mtv in 1996. >> the bible says that lust in your heart is committing adultery, so you can't mass tur bait without lust. >> i was in my 20s and excited about my new-found faith but i assure you my faith has matured and when i go to washington, d.c. it'll be the constitution on which i base all of my decisions. >> she's doing a very good job to try to marginalize a lot of the things that have come out about her. >
they call us wacky. they call us wing nuts. we call us we the people. >> reporter: trying to turn questions about her finances and her credibility into an astault by an out of touch ruling class on ordinary americans of faith. >> will they attack us? yes. will they smear our backgrounds and distort our records? undoubtedly. >> reporter: it is to a degree working. o'donnell claims to have raised $1.6 million through her website since her victory tuesday night and taken...
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197
Dec 8, 2010
12/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 197
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if fbi made contact using undercover agents. martinez made clear to them he wanted to attack the u.s. military. he seemed obsessed with the recruitment center. he discussed burning it down to ill still fear and to send a message whoever joins the military, they will be killed. and he said, i wish i knew how to make a car bomb. the fbi says they gave him many opportunities to back out. he chose not to. authorities say today, the sting reflects a disturbing trend. home-grown radicals. >> my assessment is that the threat environment now is increasingly active. >> reporter: the fbi says they fear that there are dozens, if not hundreds of people just like martin martinez, angry and easily manipulat manipulated. >> pierre, any sense of how many investigative teams the fbi has out there? >> reporter: well, diane, at any given time, the fbi says there are about 100 terrorism leads they're tracking down. so, they say they are constantly under pressure looking at cases just like this. >> pierre thomas reporting from maryland tonight, than
if fbi made contact using undercover agents. martinez made clear to them he wanted to attack the u.s. military. he seemed obsessed with the recruitment center. he discussed burning it down to ill still fear and to send a message whoever joins the military, they will be killed. and he said, i wish i knew how to make a car bomb. the fbi says they gave him many opportunities to back out. he chose not to. authorities say today, the sting reflects a disturbing trend. home-grown radicals. >> my...
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223
Jul 2, 2010
07/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 223
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but first, the pictures that stopped us all today. and a warning -- for some, they may be difficult to watch. a group of british soldiers under attack. the soldier lifts his rifle. they fire back. they believe they've hit their target. at least some of the enemy. >> enemy down! enemy down! >> reporter: but it is not long before his fellow soldier, adam smith, to the right there, gets hit. >> man down! man down! medic. get a medic. >> reporter: with that camera on his helmet, he makes his way to the 23-year-old who had been shot, the bullet raising his face. >> where is he hit? >> in the face. >> reporter: as they try to help, the fire fight continues across the open field. the men of that company lost nine soldiers in a month's time. the injured soldier would be pulled to safety, and after stitching on his face, we're told, within 48 hours, back on patrol. and so we bring in our chief foreign affairs correspondent martha raddatz, who is in afghanistan tonight. she's been there more than a dozen times now. and we know that is just one
but first, the pictures that stopped us all today. and a warning -- for some, they may be difficult to watch. a group of british soldiers under attack. the soldier lifts his rifle. they fire back. they believe they've hit their target. at least some of the enemy. >> enemy down! enemy down! >> reporter: but it is not long before his fellow soldier, adam smith, to the right there, gets hit. >> man down! man down! medic. get a medic. >> reporter: with that camera on his...
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155
Jul 28, 2010
07/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 155
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can i use my hands? is that alright? i take good care of my body and i do it so i can do this. [ male announcer ] to keep doing what you love, keep your heart healthy. cheerios can help. the whole grain oats can help lower cholesterol. i, i want to be doing roller derby until i break a hip. and then i'll do it for a little bit longer. hahaha. [ male announcer ] it's simple, love your heart so you can do what you love. what do you love? see how cheerios can help you do it. captioned by closed captioning services, inc. this is "jeopardy!"
can i use my hands? is that alright? i take good care of my body and i do it so i can do this. [ male announcer ] to keep doing what you love, keep your heart healthy. cheerios can help. the whole grain oats can help lower cholesterol. i, i want to be doing roller derby until i break a hip. and then i'll do it for a little bit longer. hahaha. [ male announcer ] it's simple, love your heart so you can do what you love. what do you love? see how cheerios can help you do it. captioned by closed...
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Jul 28, 2010
07/10
by
WJLA
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"it was a scene out of doomsday," he tells us. "may god never show it to anyone else." >> and that was nick schifrin reporting from the scene in pakistan. >>> still ahead on "world news," the new way to save a life. what you don't do can make all the difference. dr. besser shows us. >>> and, honoring a dream th thwarted by racism. watch this. it's a pretty big deal. heartburn that keeps coming back? then you're ready for new zegerid otc. zegerid otc is the first 24-hour treatment ever with two active ingredients: prescription-strength medicine plus a protective ingredient that shields the medicine from stomach acid so it's effectively absorbed. just one zegerid otc capsule a day can relieve your heartburn all day and all night. if you have frequent heartburn, try dual-ingredient zegerid otc. heartburn solved. [ but aleve can last 12 hours. tylenol 8 hour lasts 8 hours. and aleve was proven to work better on pain than tylenol 8 hour. so why am i still thinking about this? how are you? good, how are you? [ male announcer ] aleve. pr
"it was a scene out of doomsday," he tells us. "may god never show it to anyone else." >> and that was nick schifrin reporting from the scene in pakistan. >>> still ahead on "world news," the new way to save a life. what you don't do can make all the difference. dr. besser shows us. >>> and, honoring a dream th thwarted by racism. watch this. it's a pretty big deal. heartburn that keeps coming back? then you're ready for new zegerid otc....
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315
May 24, 2010
05/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 315
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oil clogs the tendrils they use to feed. back above water. what seems like mud beneath is in fact caked with runny oil. washed ashore. coming from the sheen above. and what's below. once again, the new video. >> i went down. from the space of 15 to 25 feet below the surface there was this emulsified oil. my heart was breaking as it was going. >> reporter: the unseen impact maybe sickening so many species and may be killing pel chance. >> that's a bird there. >> reporter: a bird? >> still meat on its bones. maybe from the oil. >> reporter: it may be awaiting the ones still flying above. so what about the dispersants and the oil there. the executive from bp talked today. >> reporter: today he granted us exclusive access as he came to see the oil up close. we met bp's top executive to join him for his first trip to the coast in a week. >> we're going to fight it sub sea, on the surface, on the shore. >> reporter: sounds like you're referring to churchhill, who you like to quote. >> i believe we're fighting a battle. >> reporter: he gazed down on
oil clogs the tendrils they use to feed. back above water. what seems like mud beneath is in fact caked with runny oil. washed ashore. coming from the sheen above. and what's below. once again, the new video. >> i went down. from the space of 15 to 25 feet below the surface there was this emulsified oil. my heart was breaking as it was going. >> reporter: the unseen impact maybe sickening so many species and may be killing pel chance. >> that's a bird there. >> reporter:...
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374
Jan 11, 2010
01/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 374
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this girl tells us america must be beautiful and green. and people play volleyball in the fresh air. there are two girls wearing new york knicks jackets. does she know where the knicks are? no idea. the faces out of a dickens novel. and one boy pipes up, i want a home and money. >> i want to be a teacher. >> thiis a group of girl rescued by a group. >> i want to be an engineer. >> what do you think of america? and we ask, do they think miles an hour children look different from them? they said, i bet american children are always smiling. for bill weir and all of us at abc news, i'm diane sawyer in kabul, afghanistan. and we'll see you here tomorrow ght.
this girl tells us america must be beautiful and green. and people play volleyball in the fresh air. there are two girls wearing new york knicks jackets. does she know where the knicks are? no idea. the faces out of a dickens novel. and one boy pipes up, i want a home and money. >> i want to be a teacher. >> thiis a group of girl rescued by a group. >> i want to be an engineer. >> what do you think of america? and we ask, do they think miles an hour children look...
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182
May 14, 2010
05/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 182
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an old used pontiac. >> it was scary. the first time, i couldn't really sleep. eventually i just learned to just pray and close my eyes. >> reporter: she tried to keep working, even taking on a second job, and for school, she got up to study at 3:00 in the morning. >> i just wanted a roof over my head to be able to go to school, play basketball and just live a normal, or what i would consider a normal life. >> reporter: answer sy ty and depression took such a toll on her health, she was ready to give it all up, quit school, work at whatever she could find. >> keanna thought for a moment, and she thought not about her own struggles, she thought about those of her patients. >> that if i gave up, i would give up on them and myself, too. and i felt like they needed more more than i needed to give up on hope. >> reporter: she decided to ask for help, calling relatives in little rock, miles and miles away. they said she could come. she rededicated. to the dream of what she always hoped to be. >> if keanna childress can go from being homeless to graduating with the hig
an old used pontiac. >> it was scary. the first time, i couldn't really sleep. eventually i just learned to just pray and close my eyes. >> reporter: she tried to keep working, even taking on a second job, and for school, she got up to study at 3:00 in the morning. >> i just wanted a roof over my head to be able to go to school, play basketball and just live a normal, or what i would consider a normal life. >> reporter: answer sy ty and depression took such a toll on her...
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249
Aug 9, 2010
08/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 249
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many reaching puberty years before it used to begin. and while researchers aren't sure why this is happening, they are concerned about the consequences. richard besser studied the study. >> we're scared because we didn't know if this was something that was going to cause other problems years down the road. >> reporter: shonda lewis' anxiety seemed to be supported by the study that suggested that american girls are entering puberty earlier than ever. if true, concerning news. >> girls are at risk or higher risk for earl yeonset of sexual initially and substance abuse, and long-term, they can be at risk for breast cancer and adult obesity. >> what does the study really say? we asked the senior author? many of the headlines is the age of onset puberty is going on. is that a conclusion from the study? >> i don't think from this study we can say the age is going down. >> so the girls in the study are not representative of the general population. in some cases, they were picked because they had signs of pre-existing puberty. but the trend is
many reaching puberty years before it used to begin. and while researchers aren't sure why this is happening, they are concerned about the consequences. richard besser studied the study. >> we're scared because we didn't know if this was something that was going to cause other problems years down the road. >> reporter: shonda lewis' anxiety seemed to be supported by the study that suggested that american girls are entering puberty earlier than ever. if true, concerning news....
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Jan 11, 2010
01/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 198
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this girl tells us america must be beautiful and green. and people play volleyball in the fresh air. there are two girls wearing new york knicks jackets. does she know where the knicks are? no idea. the faces out of a dickens novel. and one boy pipes up, i want a home and money. >> i want to be a teacher. >> this is a group of girls rescued by a group. >> i want to be an engineer. >> what do you think of america? and we ask, do they think miles an hour children look different from them? they said, i bet american children are always smiling. for bill weir and all of us at abc news, i'm diane sawyer in kabul, afghanistan. and we'll see you here tomorrow night. produce with a 100% guarantee... means freshness is always in season. rancher's reserve beef, guaranteed tender, says you're always ready to grill. and now, safeway has a new promise. a commitment to thousands of new everyday low prices. so you can get what you want. when you want it. at the price you need. today... and tomorrow. that's our promise. and that's... ingredients for life.
this girl tells us america must be beautiful and green. and people play volleyball in the fresh air. there are two girls wearing new york knicks jackets. does she know where the knicks are? no idea. the faces out of a dickens novel. and one boy pipes up, i want a home and money. >> i want to be a teacher. >> this is a group of girls rescued by a group. >> i want to be an engineer. >> what do you think of america? and we ask, do they think miles an hour children look...
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Jul 20, 2010
07/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 154
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using onglyza with medicines such as sulfonylureas may cause low blood sugar. some symptoms of low blood sugar are shaking, sweating and rapid heartbeat. call your doctor if you have an allergic reaction like rash, hives or swelling of the face, mouth or throat. ask your doctor if you also take a tzd as swelling in the hands, feet or ankles may worsen. blood tests will check for kidney problems. you may need a lower dose of onglyza if your kidneys are not working well or if you take certain medicines. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor about adding onglyza. extra help. extra control. you may be eligible to pay $10 a month with the onglyza value card program. shaky! shaky! and if you named your own price on car insurance, you could be picking up this tab yourself. so get allstate. [ dennis ] dollar for dollar, nobody protects you from mayhem like allstate. so, you want me to be super amazing right from the faucet, but you think home filters can be a pain in the tucus. well check this out... boo-yah! shazam! h2...o! hydrolicious! look what i can do! magic bananas
using onglyza with medicines such as sulfonylureas may cause low blood sugar. some symptoms of low blood sugar are shaking, sweating and rapid heartbeat. call your doctor if you have an allergic reaction like rash, hives or swelling of the face, mouth or throat. ask your doctor if you also take a tzd as swelling in the hands, feet or ankles may worsen. blood tests will check for kidney problems. you may need a lower dose of onglyza if your kidneys are not working well or if you take certain...
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240
Jan 14, 2010
01/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 240
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valerie used to live in brooklyn. now, he and his family are sharing food out of a tin pot. >> i can't be in the house. the house is cracked, like my walls are cracked. >> reporter: still, they consider themselves the lucky ones. last night, he watched as seven dump trucks picked up bodies right here. there are injured people everywhere. can you see me? he can, but his eyes are nearly swollen shot. this man used to work for the u.s. embassy. what will you do now? how will you support your family? we saw so many today searching for a better place, walking with all of their belongings perched on their heads, coping with unfathomable tragedy. this is your mother? >> yeah, it is. >> reporter: john scott told us he was burying his own mother on a hillside because he didn't want to put her on a mass grave. at this intersection, there are bodies blocking the street on the corner. and we're right next to a gas station which, as you can see, has sort of turned into a hospital. they don't have anywhere to take the victims that
valerie used to live in brooklyn. now, he and his family are sharing food out of a tin pot. >> i can't be in the house. the house is cracked, like my walls are cracked. >> reporter: still, they consider themselves the lucky ones. last night, he watched as seven dump trucks picked up bodies right here. there are injured people everywhere. can you see me? he can, but his eyes are nearly swollen shot. this man used to work for the u.s. embassy. what will you do now? how will you...
449
449
Jul 29, 2010
07/10
by
KGO
tv
eye 449
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>> thanks for inviting us into your homes tonight. next newscast at 6:00. >>> tonight on "world news," explosive verdict. this judge spikes most of arizona's new immigration law. >>> 100 days of oil. a milestone. what is the truth about the marshes now? the wildlife? the workers who were killed? >>> staying alive. dr. besser shows us the big change in how you save a life. >>> and, what might have been. a 78-year-old former janitor honored by the school that rejected her dream because of the color of her skin. >>> good evening. after all these months, the anger, argument and fear, a federal judge in a phoenix courtroom blocked arizona's crackdown on illegal immigration. it will not go into effect at the stroke of midnight tonight. but the emotional debate seems far from over. and bill weir has been with both sides in phoenix today. bill? >> reporter: that's right, diane. the judge in this courthouse behind me agreed with president obama today, that when it comes to america's borders and the people who cross them, it is the federal gove
>> thanks for inviting us into your homes tonight. next newscast at 6:00. >>> tonight on "world news," explosive verdict. this judge spikes most of arizona's new immigration law. >>> 100 days of oil. a milestone. what is the truth about the marshes now? the wildlife? the workers who were killed? >>> staying alive. dr. besser shows us the big change in how you save a life. >>> and, what might have been. a 78-year-old former janitor honored by...
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338
Jan 12, 2010
01/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 338
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>> in a sense that exit date is good for us. it pushes us to harder work. to strengthen our forces, to train our forces. to be realistic about life in afghanistan. and to think many times over of how better we can use our own resources and live with our own means and particularly our own country. i know america will not be completely out in another 18 months or 15 months. >> we'll have more later in the broadcast, but there's a lot of news from back home, so let's head to george stephanopoulos standing by in new york. >> still ahead on "world news," another fire storm over wall street bonuses. this time, the bankers are fighting back. >>> conan o'brien comes out swing, too, saying no to a later tonight show. with salvos for his bosses at nbc. ♪ wellbeing. we're all striving for it. purina cat chow helps you nuture it in your cat... with a full family of excellent nutrition... and helpful resources. ♪ purina cat chow. share a better life. and over probably isn't giving results you want. introducing neosporin ® lip health™. shown to restore visibly hea
>> in a sense that exit date is good for us. it pushes us to harder work. to strengthen our forces, to train our forces. to be realistic about life in afghanistan. and to think many times over of how better we can use our own resources and live with our own means and particularly our own country. i know america will not be completely out in another 18 months or 15 months. >> we'll have more later in the broadcast, but there's a lot of news from back home, so let's head to george...
137
137
Apr 29, 2010
04/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 137
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it will be used in men with advanced prostate cancer but there is immediate hope it could be used in other cancers some day too. here's how it will work. doctors extract a pint of the patient's immune dorels. those cells are shipped to a lab where they will be mixed with two key proteins. one protein acts to energize your cells and one comes from the cancer cell. it gives it a specific target to attack. those cells mixed with the proteins are returned to the doctor and injected back into the patient. >> this is something investigators have been trying decades to try to accomplish, that is, to try to use the immune system to fight cancer. >> reporter: in studies, the therapy actually helped men with advanced prostate cancer live on average four months longer, but doctors point out it helped some patients live years longer. and the hope is in combination with chemotherapy, this can help patients live longer. the drug will be very expensive, at least a $50,000 price tag for treatment. the drug maker admits it will be overwhelmed with demand in the beginning. >> you've been on the phone
it will be used in men with advanced prostate cancer but there is immediate hope it could be used in other cancers some day too. here's how it will work. doctors extract a pint of the patient's immune dorels. those cells are shipped to a lab where they will be mixed with two key proteins. one protein acts to energize your cells and one comes from the cancer cell. it gives it a specific target to attack. those cells mixed with the proteins are returned to the doctor and injected back into the...
191
191
Aug 26, 2010
08/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 191
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quote 0
this is connie culp as she used to be. a mom, with a husband, who pulled out a gun and shot her in the face. she was 40 years old. for the next four years, she would live with no jaw, no nose, no nerve endings, and then, the transplant. and in was how she looked when he transplanted face was still no. it had no feeling. she didn't know there was a tear on her cheek. but flash forward one year later, kron nooe krull of is truly going home. what's changed since we last met? >> i can sneeze normal now. >> reporter: who news you had to get used to having a nose? there is still swelling that will go down, and the nerves are regrowing. and she does muscle exercises to ensure she has a kiss and a smile. what do you love to smell now? >> well, i like smelling flowers. i like smelling a baby's hair after he gets a shower. doesn't that smell great? >> reporter: the best. >> yeah. >> reporter: the donor's family wants to stay anonymous, so all kron nooe knows it was the face of a woman roughly her age. >> reporter: everybody wondered
this is connie culp as she used to be. a mom, with a husband, who pulled out a gun and shot her in the face. she was 40 years old. for the next four years, she would live with no jaw, no nose, no nerve endings, and then, the transplant. and in was how she looked when he transplanted face was still no. it had no feeling. she didn't know there was a tear on her cheek. but flash forward one year later, kron nooe krull of is truly going home. what's changed since we last met? >> i can sneeze...
168
168
Sep 16, 2010
09/10
by
WMAR
tv
eye 168
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quote 0
it used to hover around 170 over 90. it's now pretty stable at 120 over 80. >> reporter: stress, boosting your blood pressure, is a major contributor to heart attacks. it triggers the body's fight or flight response. the brain releases adrenaline, the blood thickens the heart pumps faster. and boom. >> boom. you're dead. >> reporter: dr. kennedy says his regimen of focused breathing is the same technique professional athletes and others use. >> like, how the plane was landed on the hudson river. how kobe bryant hits the shot with no time left. >> reporter: used with every day stresses, he claims, can save your life. >> this is actually ancient wisdom being proven by modern science. >> reporter: haefling the heart by finding the quiet in the middle of life's storm. david wright, abc news, los angeles. >>> and if you want to learn more about this method, and test it out for yourself, head to abcnews.com/worldnews. >>> and, still ahead, a brand new song of hope. [ male announcer ] the financial headlines can be unsettling.
it used to hover around 170 over 90. it's now pretty stable at 120 over 80. >> reporter: stress, boosting your blood pressure, is a major contributor to heart attacks. it triggers the body's fight or flight response. the brain releases adrenaline, the blood thickens the heart pumps faster. and boom. >> boom. you're dead. >> reporter: dr. kennedy says his regimen of focused breathing is the same technique professional athletes and others use. >> like, how the plane was...
336
336
Feb 5, 2010
02/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 336
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quote 0
. >> major historic storm for us. >> this is a whopper of a system. massive system. >> maybe some historic snow moving through here. >> reporter: for a full dale now, grocery stores have been slammed. when was the last time you saw a shelf nearly 'em tim of meat or milk? there were reports of tensions rising. >> it's a mad house. it's insane. >> crazy out here. it's unbelievable. >> reporter: the federal government shut down at noon, sending workers home before the snow started pifling up. knowing what's coming, this maryland man was piling up firewood. so what are you planning on doing? >> sitting in front of the fire with a good book. >> reporter: probably a very good advise just to kind of sit this one out. the airlines are. more than 1,000 fights have been canceled. amtrak service has been tur curtailed, and it could be late sunday before all of this is dug out, and people are ready to go back to work on monday. >> after watching the super bowl, of course. okay, thanks to you, david kerley. >>> well, the new unemployment number is also out today,
. >> major historic storm for us. >> this is a whopper of a system. massive system. >> maybe some historic snow moving through here. >> reporter: for a full dale now, grocery stores have been slammed. when was the last time you saw a shelf nearly 'em tim of meat or milk? there were reports of tensions rising. >> it's a mad house. it's insane. >> crazy out here. it's unbelievable. >> reporter: the federal government shut down at noon, sending workers...
195
195
Nov 29, 2010
11/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 195
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and surely left us all laughing. >>> good evening. good to be back with you. the wikileaks organization published hundreds more government documents. they are highly sensitive documents, never meant to be read by the public, let alone world leaders who were criticized or ridiculed. they expose backstage dealings from the koreas to the kremlin. we wanted to know what in them is dangerous for the u.s. and what is merely embarrassing so john karl has been poring over the pages today and we go to you tonight, john, good evening. >> reporter: good evening, diane. the diplomatic community has been rocked by all this. i'm told tonight the secretary of state has reached out to the leaders of no fewer than two dozen nations as this administration tries to do damage control. as once secret u.s. documents dominate headlines around the world, secretary of state clinton today lashed out at wikileaks. >> it puts people's lives in danger, threatens our national security and undermines our efforts to work with other countries to solve shared problems. >> reporter: the latest
and surely left us all laughing. >>> good evening. good to be back with you. the wikileaks organization published hundreds more government documents. they are highly sensitive documents, never meant to be read by the public, let alone world leaders who were criticized or ridiculed. they expose backstage dealings from the koreas to the kremlin. we wanted to know what in them is dangerous for the u.s. and what is merely embarrassing so john karl has been poring over the pages today and...
248
248
Jul 30, 2010
07/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 248
favorite 0
quote 0
will they use it to hire? we called them. >> thank you for calling dupont. >> thank you for calling microsoft. >> reporter: only caterpillar offered hard numbers. do you plan to hire? >> yes, we've hired 3,000 employees to date. >> reporter: a number they say could reach 9,000 this year. how many are right here in the u.s.? >> about 3,000. >> reporter: and why so many b jobs overseas? >> that's where the need -- excuse me, that's where the customer is. >> reporter: a third of the new jobs here in the u.s. economists told me there's only so far you can push the work force, making their work harder, longer hours, to make the companies leaner and meaner. they said to keep the profits up, they're going to have to spend all the billions in profits on the sidelines in hiring new workers. >> right now, productivity is keeping it going. >> reporter: it is. all-tile high. >> all right, thank you, david. >>> and we turn now to afghanistan, because there was tough news out of afghanistan tonight. three more american troo
will they use it to hire? we called them. >> thank you for calling dupont. >> thank you for calling microsoft. >> reporter: only caterpillar offered hard numbers. do you plan to hire? >> yes, we've hired 3,000 employees to date. >> reporter: a number they say could reach 9,000 this year. how many are right here in the u.s.? >> about 3,000. >> reporter: and why so many b jobs overseas? >> that's where the need -- excuse me, that's where the...
317
317
Jun 25, 2010
06/10
by
WJLA
tv
eye 317
favorite 0
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they come to us for help. at ge capital, we've been financing taylor guitars for over eight years, helping them build a strong dealer network. bringing music to people... i like that. ♪ ♪ [ bob ] i didn't know you could play. i didn't either. ♪
they come to us for help. at ge capital, we've been financing taylor guitars for over eight years, helping them build a strong dealer network. bringing music to people... i like that. ♪ ♪ [ bob ] i didn't know you could play. i didn't either. ♪